Julaybib wrote:
Salaam.
In the city of Ashkabad, there once had been a well known high profile family dynasty the Ansaris, they had grown wealthy initially through the ownership of copper mines. But over the years they had managed too monopolise many other industries.
The family not only enjoyed a high profile and prestige for their extraordinary wealth but also for the great deal of influence they exercised politically. However over the passage of time , and with increased international competition, the family owned company Shalimar Industries collapsed. The Wealth was seized by a number of creditors in a series of high profile court cases. The members of this high profile, almost aristocratic family were left broke and penniless.
Some years later a journalist for the local newspaper the 'Ashkabad Times' decided to do a story on the surviving members of the Ansari clan to see what became of them.
She managed to track down the last CEO of Shalimar industries and the head of the Ansari family, Asad al-Ansari, to a small apartment on the outskirts of Ashkabad.
Asad al-Ansari who was now an elderly man in his sixties and dressed in humble clothes, a far cry from the expensive tailored made clothes and the Diamond encrusted watches, and all the other trappings of wealth that he used to be reknowned for. There used to be regular features of him that appeared in the fashion pages of various publications.
Today he was a man of simple tastes and earned a modest living selling shoes in the famous Ashkabad market . During her interview the Journalist asked him how he had managed to cope with such a great fall from grace?
Asad al-Ansari, with his eyes lit up, and a smile on his face responded;
" I feel blessed, and today I feel truly wealthy, sure the expensive cars and the private jets along with the Mansions and a legion of servants are all gone. But what I have discovered in its place is the true wealth the wealth of contentment.
'A wealthy man is not one who owns the most toys, it is someone who feels content with what they have. I have my health, my family and all the material things that I need. What I discovered is that a $10 watch, fulfills its purpose adequately, it is just as good as a $100,000 watch. A humble house filled with a loving family atmosphere is just as good as a large mansion.
'Whilst in my previous life I was driven by greed and insecurity, the more money I had the less secure I felt and the need to earn more. We had endless fights and bickering in the family over money. I wasted years in the pursuit of acquiring things to earn prestige and status in the sight of others.
'While in reality what is important is who you are as a human being, not how much wealth you have."
Written by Julaybib.
Just A thought:
How much of our time is wasted, in the pursuit of the Duniyah. We look at others who have more material wealth with envy and bemoan our own situation. the more we acquire the more we want our hearts are devoid of contentment. we think somehow having the latest designer clothes or status symbols is going to raise our rank. Or our relatives and our friends will look up to us.
We totally forget to reform our own characters, and fail to see that in the Akhirah none of these worldly things we pursue will have any significance.
May Allah guides us towards what is good, especially a hypocrite and sinner like me Ameen.
P.s. I humbly request your duas.
In the city of Ashkabad, there once had been a well known high profile family dynasty the Ansaris, they had grown wealthy initially through the ownership of copper mines. But over the years they had managed too monopolise many other industries.
The family not only enjoyed a high profile and prestige for their extraordinary wealth but also for the great deal of influence they exercised politically. However over the passage of time , and with increased international competition, the family owned company Shalimar Industries collapsed. The Wealth was seized by a number of creditors in a series of high profile court cases. The members of this high profile, almost aristocratic family were left broke and penniless.
Some years later a journalist for the local newspaper the 'Ashkabad Times' decided to do a story on the surviving members of the Ansari clan to see what became of them.
She managed to track down the last CEO of Shalimar industries and the head of the Ansari family, Asad al-Ansari, to a small apartment on the outskirts of Ashkabad.
Asad al-Ansari who was now an elderly man in his sixties and dressed in humble clothes, a far cry from the expensive tailored made clothes and the Diamond encrusted watches, and all the other trappings of wealth that he used to be reknowned for. There used to be regular features of him that appeared in the fashion pages of various publications.
Today he was a man of simple tastes and earned a modest living selling shoes in the famous Ashkabad market . During her interview the Journalist asked him how he had managed to cope with such a great fall from grace?
Asad al-Ansari, with his eyes lit up, and a smile on his face responded;
" I feel blessed, and today I feel truly wealthy, sure the expensive cars and the private jets along with the Mansions and a legion of servants are all gone. But what I have discovered in its place is the true wealth the wealth of contentment.
'A wealthy man is not one who owns the most toys, it is someone who feels content with what they have. I have my health, my family and all the material things that I need. What I discovered is that a $10 watch, fulfills its purpose adequately, it is just as good as a $100,000 watch. A humble house filled with a loving family atmosphere is just as good as a large mansion.
'Whilst in my previous life I was driven by greed and insecurity, the more money I had the less secure I felt and the need to earn more. We had endless fights and bickering in the family over money. I wasted years in the pursuit of acquiring things to earn prestige and status in the sight of others.
'While in reality what is important is who you are as a human being, not how much wealth you have."
Written by Julaybib.
Just A thought:
How much of our time is wasted, in the pursuit of the Duniyah. We look at others who have more material wealth with envy and bemoan our own situation. the more we acquire the more we want our hearts are devoid of contentment. we think somehow having the latest designer clothes or status symbols is going to raise our rank. Or our relatives and our friends will look up to us.
We totally forget to reform our own characters, and fail to see that in the Akhirah none of these worldly things we pursue will have any significance.
May Allah guides us towards what is good, especially a hypocrite and sinner like me Ameen.
P.s. I humbly request your duas.

